Bad As Me

General | Jan 2012

Reviews

MC Dizzy Jackson
Reviewed 2012-01-16
On the heels of being inducted into the Rock ‘N’ Roll Hall Of Fame, Tom Waits releases another of his many works of art, Bad As Me. This has everything in the Waits canon: beautiful ballad-types, bizarre outsider sounds, memorable story-songs, great lyrics. A few of Tom’s latest characters: Mackey Debiasi, Gunplay Maxwell, Flat Nose George. A few of Tom’s support cast: Larry Taylor, Marc Ribot (who’s got one of the most disctinctive guitars in music and a long time Waits sideman), Augie Myers, Flea, Les Claypool, David Hidalgo, Charlie Musselwhite, his son Casey on drums, and Keith Richards on vocals and guitar. An absolute killer of an album, and, definitely, one of his best. Included are 3 bonus songs which appear on the deluxe CD package (#14, 15, 16). FCC #12.

*My Favorites*: All, of course.

1. (2:15) Mid. Ominous, staccato horns, driving with drums, gutiar, harmonica as the train leaves, fade-out.
2. (3:24) Mid. Augie on the Halloween organ, Tom on the tabla, Flea on subdued, but funky bass. ‘It takes a raised right man to keep a happy hen’.
3. (4:14) Slow / Mid. High-register vocal, very swampy and dark. ‘someone makes money when there’s blood in the street’. Great piano, guitar.
4. (2:42) Mid / Fast. Upbeat, channeling some ’50’s R n R stylings. ‘Roll down all the windows / turn up Wolfman Jack / please, please love me tender / ain’t nothing wrong with that’. Fade-out with Spanish lyrics. Kick ass.
5. (3:43) Slow / Mid. Dreamy, swirly keys, cool percussion. Spacey, mellow and beautiful.
6. (3:14) Slow / Mid. Accordion, vibes, violin lend a carnival feel. Song about performing on the road. Great vocal.
7. (2:49) Slow / Mid. Guitars, brushes on drums, blocks. Heartbreaking beautiful number. Spanish guitar styling. Highly recommended.
8. (3:10) Mid. Title track. Mean horn, pounding beat, harmonica, wailing vocal. Killer.
9. (3:41) Slow. Guitar, bass, piano, vocal, very sparse. Crackling fire or playing vinyl backdrop.
10. (4:05) Mid / Fast. Nod to the Stones, featuring Richards on vocal and guitar. Horns out the gate, Claypool bass, great Ribot guitar, classic Tom vocal wailings. Killer breakdown, Musselwhite harmonica, swirling keys. Great ending. Kicks ass.
11. (2:56) Slow. Last leaf as metaphor for an aging musician. Duet with Richards. Guitar, bass, pump organ, great lyrics. Really beautiful.
12. (3:57) Mid / Fast. FCC. Warning: this song will change you!! Song about a soldier and his experience. This may be the most haunting, disturbing song ever written. Frightening horns, Ribot’s guitar will scare, Tom’s vocal is infectious. Machine gun guitar. Almost a carnival ending with Ribot going off on guitar. Heavy shit.
13. (4:26) Mid. Accordion gives this a Mexican sound. Very mellow, heartbreaking and beautiful. Incorporates Robert Burns’ ‘Auld Lang Syne’ poem.
14. (2:51) Mid. Big drum, horns, bass. A bit sparse, great vocal, fades out.
15. (3:43) Mid. Beautiful guitar, shaker, bass, violin. Lyrics structured a bit like Bob Dylan’s ‘Seven Curses’. Great stuff.
16. (2:47) Mid. Great vocal. Eerie with organ, cool guitar.

Recent airplay

Tell Me
TraditionsMar 25, 2025
New Year's Eve
TraditionsDec 29, 2022

Charting

2012-01-22 — 2012-03-25
Week EndingAirplays
Mar 25 1
Mar 18 2
Mar 11 3
Mar 4 2
Feb 26 1
Feb 19 2
Feb 12 2
Feb 5 2

Track listing

1. Chicago
2. Raised Right Men
3. Talking At The Same Time
4. Get Lost
5. Face To The Highway
6. Pay Me
7. Back In The Crowd
8. Bad As Me
9. Kiss Me
10. Satisfied
11. Last Leaf
12. Hell Broke Luce
13. New Year's Eve
14. She Stole The Blush
15. Tell Me
16. After You Die